Systems, methods, and devices, such as a device including a floating-gate transistor, a quantizing circuit coupled to the floating-gate transistor, and a controller configured to vary a voltage of a gate of the floating-gate transistor when reading data from the floating-gate transistor. The floating-gate transistor, the quantizing circuit, and the controller device may form a memory device that may utilize the quantizing circuit to retrieve data stored via variable reference signals.
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18. A method, comprising:
sensing a first value by sensing a data location at a first gate voltage;
sensing a second value by sensing the data location at a second gate voltage; and
combining the first value with the second value to identify data conveyed by the data location.
9. A system, comprising:
a data location;
a delta-sigma modulator coupled to the data location;
a digital filter coupled to the delta-sigma modulator;
an interfuser coupled to the digital filter; and
a controller coupled to the data location, wherein the controller is configured to vary a parameter of the data location.
1. A system, comprising:
a floating-gate transistor;
a quantizing circuit coupled to the floating-gate transistor; and
a controller configured to vary at least one of a voltage applied to a gate of the floating-gate transistor and a voltage between a source and a drain of the floating-gate transistor when reading data from the floating-gate transistor.
2. The system of
a low-pass digital filter; and
a delta-sigma modulator.
3. The system of
a counter; and
an interfuser coupled to the counter.
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1. Field of Invention
Embodiments of the present invention relate generally to memory devices and, more specifically, in a particular embodiment, to quantizing circuits with variable reference signals.
2. Description of Related Art
Generally, memory devices include an array of memory elements and associated sense amplifiers. The memory elements store data, and the sense amplifiers read the data from the memory elements. To read data, for example, a current is passed through the memory element, and the current or a resulting voltage is sensed by the sense amplifier. Conventionally, the sense amplifier senses the current or voltage by comparing it to a reference current or voltage. Depending on whether the current or voltage is greater than the reference, the sense amplifier outputs a value of one or zero. That is, the sense amplifier quantizes the analog signal from the memory element into one of two logic states.
Many types of memory elements are capable of assuming more than just two states. For example, some memory elements are capable of muti-bit (e.g., more than two state) storage. For instance, rather than outputting either a high or low voltage, the memory element may output four or eight different voltage levels, each level corresponding to a different data value. However, conventional sense amplifiers often fail to distinguish accurately between the additional levels because the difference between the levels (e.g., a voltage difference) in a multi-bit memory element is often smaller than the difference between the levels in a single-bit (i.e., two state) memory element. Thus, conventional sense amplifiers often cannot read multi-bit memory elements. This problem may be increased as high performance multi-bit memory elements become increasingly dense, thereby reducing the size of the memory elements and the difference between the levels (e.g., voltage) to be sensed by the sense amplifiers.
A variety of factors may tend to prevent the sense amplifier from discerning small differences in the levels of a multi-bit memory element. For instance, noise in the power supply, ground, and reference voltage may cause an inaccurate reading of the memory element. The noise may have a variety of sources, such as temperature variations, parasitic signals, data dependent effects, and manufacturing process variations. This susceptibility to noise often leads a designer to reduce the number of readable states of the memory element, which tends to reduce memory density and increase the cost of memory.
Conventional sense amplifiers present similar problems in imaging devices. In these devices, an array of light sensors output a current or voltage in response to light impinging upon the sensor. The magnitude of the current or voltage typically depends upon the intensity of the light. Thus, the capacity of the sense amplifier to accurately convert the current or voltage into a digital signal may determine, in part, the fidelity of the captured image. Consequently, noise affecting the sense amplifier may diminish the performance of imaging devices.
Various embodiments of the present invention are described below. In an effort to provide a concise description of these embodiments, not all features of an actual implementation are described in the specification. It should be appreciated that in the development of any such actual implementation, as in any engineering or design project, numerous implementation-specific decisions must be made to achieve the developers' specific goals, such as compliance with system-related and business-related constraints, which may vary from one implementation to another. Moreover, it should be appreciated that such a development effort might be complex and time consuming but would nevertheless be a routine undertaking of design, fabrication, and manufacture for those of ordinary skill having the benefit of this disclosure.
Some of the subsequently described embodiments may address one or more of the problems with conventional sense amplifiers discussed above. Some embodiments include a quantizing circuit configured to detect small differences in voltages and/or currents. As explained below, the quantizing circuit may sample the measured electrical parameter on multiple occasions and filter, e.g., average or sum, the samples to reduce the impact of noise. As a result, in some embodiments, the quantizing circuit may resolve small differences between voltage or current levels in multi-bit memory elements and/or light sensors, which may allow circuit designers to increase the number of bits stored per memory element and/or the sensitivity of an imaging device. Prior to describing these embodiments and their advantages, the environment in which they may operate is described.
Myriad devices may embody one or more of the present techniques. For example, the electronic device 10 may be a storage device, a communications device, an entertainment device, an imaging system, or a computer system, such as a personal computer, a server, a mainframe, a tablet computer, a palm-top computer, or a laptop.
When accessing the memory elements, the control circuitry may receive a command to read from or write to a target memory address. The control circuitry 28 may then convert the target address into a row address and a column address. In the illustrated embodiment, the row address bus 30 transmits the row address to the row address latches 26, and a column address bus 32 transmits column address to the column address latches 20. After an appropriate settling time, a row address strobe (RAS) signal 34 (or other controlling clock signal) may be asserted by the control circuitry 28, and the row address latches 26 may latch the transmitted row address. Similarly, the control circuitry 28 may assert a column address strobe 36, and the column address latches 20 may latch the transmitted column address.
Once row and column addresses are latched, the row decoder 24 may determine which row of the memory array 14 corresponds to the latched row address, and the row drivers 22 may assert a signal on the selected row. Similarly, the column decoder 18 may determine which column of the memory array 14 corresponds with the latched column address, and the quantizing circuit 16 may quantize a voltage or current on the selected column. Additional details of reading and writing are described below.
The memory elements and imaging elements may be referred to generally as data locations, i.e., devices or elements configured to convey data, either stored or generated by a sensor, when sensed by a sensing circuit, such as the quantizing circuits discussed below. The data locations may be formed on an integrated semiconductor device (e.g., a device formed on a single crystal of silicon) that also includes the other components of the memory device 12 (or imaging device 13).
In some embodiments, the illustrated memory elements 64 are flash memory devices. The operation of the flash memory elements is described further below with reference to the
Several of the components of the circuit 66 represent phenomenon affecting the memory elements 64 when it is sensed. The pre-drain resistor 70 generally represents the drain-to-bitline resistance of the memory elements 64 coupled to the bit-line above (i.e., up current from) WL3 when these memory elements 64 are turned on, (e.g., during a read operation). Similarly, the post source resistor 72 generally corresponds to the source-to-ground resistance of the memory elements 64 coupled to the bit-line below WL3 when the memory element 64 is sensed. The circuit 66 models electrical phenomena associated with reading the memory elements 64 at the intersection of WL3 and BL0.
The operation of the memory elements 64 will now be briefly described with reference to
To write data to the memory elements 64, a charge corresponding to the data may be stored on the floating gate 78. The charge of the floating gate 78 may be modified by applying voltages to the source 82, drain 80, and/or gate 76 such that the resulting electric fields produce phenomenon like Fowler-Northam tunneling and/or hot-electron injection near the floating gate 78. Initially, the memory elements 64 may be erased by applying a word-line voltage designed to drive electrons off of the floating gate 78. In some embodiments, an entire column or block of memory elements 64 may be erased generally simultaneously. Once the memory elements 64 are erased, the gate 76 voltage may be manipulated to drive a charge onto the floating gate 78 that is indicative of a data value. After the write operation ends, the stored charge may remain on the floating gate 78 (i.e., the memory elements 64 may store data in a nonvolatile fashion).
As illustrated by
The accuracy with which the bit-line current is quantized may affect the amount of data that a designer attempts to store in each memory element 64. For example, in a system with a low sensitivity, a single bit may be stored on each memory element 64. In such a system, a floating gate voltage VFG of 0x may represent a binary value of 0, and a floating gate voltage VFG of −7x may represent a binary value of one. Thus, the difference in floating gate voltages VFG corresponding to different data values may be relatively large, and the resulting differences and bit-line currents for different data values may also be relatively large. As a result, even low-sensitivity sensing circuitry may discern these large differences in bit-line current during a read operation and correctly categorize the sensed voltage or current. In contrast, high-sensitivity sensing circuitry may facilitate storing more data in each memory element 64. For instance, if the sensing circuitry can distinguish between the eight different I-V traces depicted by
However, as mentioned above, a variety of effects may interfere with accurate measurement of the bit-line current. For instance, the position of the memory elements 64 along a bit-line may affect RPD and RPS, which may affect the relationship between the word-line voltage VWL and the bit-line current IBIT. To illustrate these effects,
In operation, the quantizing circuit 16 may quantize (e.g., digitize) analog signals from the memory elements 64 in a manner that is relatively robust to noise. As explained below, the quantizing circuit 16 may do this by converting the analog signals into a bit-stream and digitally filtering high-frequency components from the bit-stream.
The analog-to-digital converter 88 may be a one-bit, analog-to-digital converter or a multi-bit, analog-to-digital converter. In the present embodiment, an analog-to-digital converter 88 receives an analog signal from the memory element 64, e.g., a bit-line current IBIT or a bit-line voltage VBL, and outputs a bit-stream that represents the analog signal. The bit-stream may be a one-bit, serial signal with a time-averaged value that generally represents the time-averaged value of the analog signal from the memory element 64. That is, the bit-stream may fluctuate between values of zero and one, but its average value, over a sufficiently large period of time, may be proportional to the average value of the analog signal from the memory element 64. In certain embodiments, the bit-stream from the analog-to-digital converter 88 may be a pulse-density modulated (PDM) version of the analog signal. The analog-to-digital converter 88 may transmit the bit-stream to the digital filter 90 on a bit-stream signal path 94.
The digital filter 90 may digitally filter high-frequency noise from the bit-stream. To this end, the digital filter 90 may be a low-pass filter, such as a counter, configured to average (e.g., integrate and divide by the sensing time) the bit-stream over a sensing time, i.e., the time period over which the memory element 64 is sensed. (Alternatively, in some embodiments, the digital filter 90 is configured to integrate the bit-stream without dividing by the sensing time.) As a result, the digital filter 90 may output a value that is representative of both the average value of the bit-stream and the average value of the analog signal from the memory element 64. In some embodiments, the digital filter 90 is a counter, and the cut-off frequency of the digital filter 90 may be selected by adjusting the duration of the sensing time. In the present embodiment, increasing the sensing time will lower the cutoff frequency. That is, the frequency response of the digital filter 90 may be modified by adjusting the period of time over which the bit-stream is integrated and/or averaged before outputting a final value. The frequency response of the digital filter 90 is described further below with reference to
Advantageously, in certain embodiments, the quantizing circuit 16 may facilitate the use of multi-bit memory elements 64. As described above, in traditional designs, the number of discrete data values that a memory element 64 stores may be limited by sense amps that react to noise. In contrast, the quantizing circuit 16 may be less susceptible to noise, and, as a result, the memory elements 64 may be configured to store additional data. Without the high frequency noise, the intervals between signals representative of different data values may be made smaller, and the number of data values stored by a given memory element 64 may be increased. Thus, beneficially, the quantizing circuit 16 may read memory elements 64 that store several bits of data, e.g., 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, or more bits per memory element 64.
Although the quantizing circuit 16 may sense the signal from the memory element 64 over a longer period of time than conventional designs, the overall speed of the memory device 12 may be improved. As compared to a conventional device, each read or write operation of the memory device 12 may transfer more bits of data into or out of the memory element 64. As a result, while each read or write operation may take longer, more data may be read or written during the operation, thereby improving overall performance. Further, in some memory devices 12, certain processes may be performed in parallel with a read or write operation, thereby further reducing the overall impact of the longer sensing time. For example, in some embodiments, the memory array 14 may be divided into banks that operate at least partially independently, so that, while data is being written or read from one bank, another bank can read or write data in parallel.
As illustrated, an input of the counter 90 may connect to the bit-stream signal path 94, which may connect to an output of the comparator 96. The output of the comparator 96 may also connect to a gate of the switch 100 by a feedback signal path 102. The output terminal (e.g., source or drain) of the switch 100 may connect in series to one of the bit-lines 38, 40, 42, 44, or 46, and the input terminal of the switch 100 may connect to a reference current source 104 (IREF). One plate of the capacitor 98 may connect to one of the bit-lines 38, 40, 42, 44, or 46, and the other plate of the capacitor 98 may connect to ground.
The illustrated counter 90 counts the number of clock cycles that the bit-stream 94 is at a logic high value or logic low value during the sensing time. The counter may count up or count down, depending on the embodiment. In some embodiments, the counter 90 may do both, counting up one for each clock cycle that the bit-stream has a logic high value and down one for each clock cycle that the bit-stream has a logic low value. Output terminals (D0-D5) of the counter 90 may connect to the input/output bus 92 for transmitting the count. The counter 90 may be configured to be reset to zero or some other value when a reset signal is asserted. In some embodiments, the counter 90 may be a series connection of D-flip flops, e.g., D-flip flops having SRAM or other memory for storing an initial value and/or values to be written to the memory element 64.
In the illustrated embodiment, the clocked comparator 96 compares a reference voltage (VREF) to the voltage of one of the bit-lines 38, 40, 42, 44, or 46 (VBL), which may be generally equal to the voltage of one plate of the capacitor 98. The comparator 96 may be clocked (e.g., falling and/or rising edge triggered), and the comparison may be performed at regular intervals based on the clock signal, e.g., once per clock cycle. Additionally, the comparator 96 may latch, i.e., continue to output, values (VFB) between comparisons. Thus, when the clock signals the comparator 96 to perform a comparison, if VBL is less than VREF, then the comparator 96 may latch its output to a logic low value, as described below in reference to
Advantageously, in some embodiments, the quantizing circuit 16 may include a single comparator (e.g., not more than one) for each column of multi-level memory elements 64. In contrast, conventional sense amplifiers often include multiple comparators to read from a multi-bit memory cell, thereby potentially increasing device complexity and cost.
The capacitor 98 may be formed by capacitive coupling of the bit-lines 38, 40, 42, 44, and 46. In other designs, this type of capacitance is referred to as parasitic capacitance because it often hinders the operation of the device. However, in this embodiment, the capacitor 98 may be used to integrate differences between currents on the bit-lines 38, 40, 42, 44, or 46 and the reference current to form the bit-stream, as explained further below. In some embodiments, the capacitor 98 may be supplemented or replaced with an integrated capacitor that provides greater capacitance than the “parasitic” bit-line capacitance.
The illustrated switch 100 selectively transmits current IREF from the reference current source 104. In various embodiments, the switch 100 may be a PMOS transistor (as illustrated in
The operation of the quantizing circuit 16 will now be described with reference to
To sense the current through the memory element 64, the illustrated delta-sigma modulator 88 exploits transient effects to output a bit-stream representative of the bit-line current IBIT. Specifically, the delta-sigma modulator 88 may repeatedly charge and discharge the capacitor 98 with a current divider that subtracts the bit-line current IBIT from the reference current IREF. Consequently, a large current through the memory element 64 may rapidly discharge the capacitor 98, and a small current through the memory element 64 may slowly discharge the capacitor 98.
To charge and discharge the capacitor 98, the delta-sigma modulator 88 switches between two states: the state depicted by
Starting with the charging state (
The comparator 96 and the reference current source 104 may cooperate to charge the capacitor 98 for a discrete number of clock cycles. That is, when the delta-sigma modulator 88 transitions to the charging state, the delta-sigma modulator 88 may remain in this state for an integer number of clock cycles. In the illustrated embodiment, the comparator 96, the output of which is latched, changes state no more than once per clock cycle, so the switch 100, which is controlled by the output of the comparator 96, VFB, conducts current for a discrete number of clock cycles. As a result, the reference current source 104 conducts current IREF through the bit-line and into the capacitor 98 for an integer number of clock cycles.
After each clock cycle of charging the capacitor 98, the delta-sigma modulator 88 may transition from the charging state to the discharging state, which is illustrated by
In the present embodiment, the delta-sigma modulator 88 discharges the capacitor 98 for a discrete number of clock intervals. After each clock cycle of discharging the capacitor 98, the delta-sigma modulator 88 compares VBL to VREF. If VBL is still greater than VREF, then the comparator 96 may continue to output a logic high signal, i.e., VFB=1, and the switch 100 remains open. On the other hand, if enough current has flowed out of the capacitor 98 that VBL is less than VREF, then the comparator 96 may output a logic low signal, i.e., VFB=0, and the switch 100 may close, thereby transitioning the delta-sigma modulator 88 back to the charging state and initiating a new cycle.
The counter 90 may count the number of clock cycles that the delta-sigma modulator 88 is in either the charging state or the discharging state by monitoring the bit-stream signal path 94. The bit-stream signal path 94 may transition back and forth between logic high and logic low with the output of the comparator 96, VFB, and the counter 90 may increment and/or decrement a count once per clock cycle (or other appropriate interval) based on whether the bit-stream is logic high or logic low. After the sensing time has passed, the counter 90 may output a signal indicative of the count on output terminals D0-D5. As explained below, the count may correspond, e.g., proportionally, to the bit-line current, IBIT.
As illustrated by
A comparison of
The capacitance of the capacitor 98 may be selected with both the clock frequency and the range of expected bit-line currents in mind. For example, the capacitor 98 may be large enough that the capacitor 98 does not fully discharge (e.g., saturate) when the bit-line current IBIT is either at its lowest expected value or at its highest expected value. That is, in some embodiments, the capacitor 98 generally remains in a transient state while reading the memory element 64. Similarly, the frequency at which the comparator 96 is clocked may affect the design of the capacitor 98. A relatively high frequency clock signal may leave the capacitor 98 with relatively little time to discharge or saturate between clock cycles, thereby leading a designer to choose a smaller capacitor 98.
Similarly, the size of the reference current may be selected with the range of expected bit-line currents in mind. Specifically, in certain embodiments, the reference current is less than the largest expected bit-line current IBIT, so that, in the case of maximum bit-line current IBIT, the capacitor 98 can draw charge from the reference current while the rest of the reference current flows through the memory element 64.
IBIT/IREF=Count/NST
Thus, in the illustrated embodiment, the count corresponds with (e.g., is indicative of) the bit-line current IBIT, which corresponds with the value stored by the memory element 64.
Advantageously, the quantizing circuit 16 may quantize (e.g., categorize) the bit-line current IBIT as falling into one of a large number of categories, each of which is represented by an increment of the count. In doing so, in some embodiments, the quantizing circuit 16 may resolve small differences in the bit-line current IBIT. The resolution of the quantizing circuit 16 may be characterized by the following equation (Equation 2), in which IMR represents the smallest resolvable difference in bit-line current IBIT, i.e., the resolution of the quantizing circuit 16:
IMR=IREF/NST
Thus, the resolution of the quantizing circuit 16 may be increased by increasing the sensing time or the clock frequency or by decreasing IREF, which may limit the maximum cell current since IMR is less than IREF.
The resolution of the quantizing circuit 16 may facilitate storing multiple bits in the memory element 64 or sensing multiple levels of light intensity in an image sensor element. For example, if the quantizing circuit 16 is configured to quantize (e.g., categorize) the bit-line current IBIT into one of four different levels, then the memory element 64 may store two-bits of data or, if the quantizing circuit 16 is configured to categorize the bit-line current IBIT into one of eight different current levels, then the memory element 64 may store three-bits of data. For the present embodiment, the number of bits stored by the memory element 64 may be characterized by the following equation (Equation 3), in which NB represents the number of bits stored by a memory element 64 and IRANGE represents the range of programmable bit-line currents through the memory element 64:
NB=log(IRANGE/IMR)/log 2
In short, in the present embodiment, greater resolution translates into higher density data storage for a given memory element 64.
Truncating less significant digits may introduce a rounding error, or a downward bias, in the output. This effect may be mitigated by presetting (e.g., driving latches to a particular state in advance of counting or storing a value in memory) the counter 90 in a manner that accounts for this bias. The counter 90 may be preset either before reading from the memory element 64 or before writing to the memory element 64. In some embodiments, the preset value may be one-half of the size of the range of counter values that represent a single output value. In other words, if m digits are truncated from the output, then the counter 90 may be preset to one-half of 2m before reading from a memory element 64 or before writing to the memory element 64. In some embodiments, the memory in the counter 90 may store this preset value.
In some of the previously described embodiments, the reference voltage VREF is generally constant while sensing the data location 64. This is not necessarily the case in the embodiment of
The illustrated quantizing circuit 120 includes the features of the previously described quantizing circuit 16 (
These additional components 122 and 124 may communicate with other portions of the quantizing circuit 120. In the present embodiment, the controller 122 communicates with three other components: an inverting input of the comparator 96 via a reference signal path 126, an input of the counter 90 via a reset signal path 128, and an input of the interfuser 124 via a state signal path 130. The illustrated interfuser 124 may connect (e.g., directly or indirectly) to both the counter 90 and the input/output bus 92 via a plurality of digit signal paths labeled D0-D5. Other embodiments may include more or fewer digit signal paths. In some embodiments, the number of digit signal paths coupling the interfuser 124 to the counter 90 may be different (i.e., less or more) than the number of digit signal paths coupling the interfuser 124 to the input/output bus 92.
Like some of the previously described embodiments, the components of the illustrated quantizing circuit 120 may be formed on an integrated semiconductor device. However, in some embodiments, one or more of the components of the illustrated quantizing circuit 120 may be disposed on another chip or device.
The illustrated controller 122 may be configured to coordinate the operation of the quantizing circuit 120. For example, the controller 122 may vary a parameter, such as the reference voltage VREF applied to the inverting input of the comparator 96. In some embodiments, the controller 122 may vary VREF according to a process described below in reference to
The operation of the quantizing circuit 120 will now be described with reference to the following figures:
As noted,
With the exception of the change in reference voltage VREF, the traces illustrated by
In this embodiment, when VREF increases, the set-point of the delta-sigma modulator 88 changes and VBL rises, thereby driving more current IBIT through the data location 64 to ground 74. As a result, in this embodiment, the count accumulates faster during the second sensing time 134 than during the first sensing time 132, because a higher VREF leads to a higher VBL, which drives a larger bit-line current IBIT to ground 74. A larger IBIT may cause VFB to remain at logic high for more time to accommodate the larger bit-line current IBIT, and the count may accumulate faster.
The change that results from changing VREF may depend on the type of data location and its state. An example of the relationship between bit-line current IBIT and bit-line voltage VBL is illustrated by
For each of the traces, both the current at a given voltage and the overall shape of the trace may be distinct from the other traces. For example, in the trace corresponding to a floating gate charge of −6x, VREF-LOW produces a bit-line current I1, and VREF-HIGH produces a bit-line current I2. Not only are both of these currents I1 and I2, considered alone, different from the IBIT through transistors with different VFG at the same VBL, the relationship between I1 and I2 is also different for each VFG. Specifically, in this embodiment, the slope of each trace changes depending on VFG. Thus, in this embodiment, given the two coordinates represented by I1 and I2, each trace has three distinguishing characteristics: the value of I1, the value of I2, and the slope from VREF-LOW to VREF-HIGH. This additional information about the response of the data location 64 to different voltages can be used to identify the floating gate charge and, thereby, read data.
In some embodiments, the quantizing circuit 120 may read data by performing a sensing process 140 illustrated by
After C1 is generated, the controller 124 may signal the interfuser 124 to latch the output of the counter 90 and, thereby, receive the first value. Thus, the interfuser 124 may include memory. Also, in some embodiments, the controller 122 may reset the counter 90 to prepare the counter to generate a second value under different conditions.
Next in the process 140, a second value is generated by sensing the data location at a second voltage, as illustrated by block 144. The second value may be a count (referred to as C2) from the delta-sigma modulator 88 (
The second value may be generated generally consecutively with, e.g., immediately after, determining the first value. However, in some embodiments, there may be a waiting period between determining the first value and the second value. For example, the controller 122 in the quantizing circuit 120 (
After determining the first value and the second value, they may be combined to identify data stored by the data location, as illustrated by block 146 (
After the second count C2 is generated, the controller 122 may signal the interfuser 124 to latch the outputs of the counter 90 and receive the second count C2, and this second value may be combined with the first value to identify the data stored by the data location 64. In some embodiments, the interfuser 124 may combine the first value with its second value according to an equation. That is, the data may be a function of C1 and C2, which are sensed under different conditions. Below, is an example of such an equation (Equation 4), in which E1, E2, and E3 are empirically or analytically determined constants:
Data=E1·C1·+E2·C2+E3(C2−C1)/(VREF-HIGH−VREFLOW)
The constants E1, E2, and E3 may be determined by testing or modeling the operation of a data location. The constants E1, E2, and E3 may be selected to minimize the likelihood of an erroneous reading. By changing these values, different weights may be attached to different terms depending on its descriptive strength. In some embodiments, VREF-HIGH and VREF-LOW may be generally fixed or constant, and the reciprocal of their difference may be incorporated into the constant E3.
In other embodiments, a variety of other equations or sensor fusion techniques may be employed to identify the stored data. Examples of other types of sensor fusion algorithms include a Kalman filter, a Bayesian network, or a neural network.
In some embodiments, additional values may be generated by sensing the data location 64 at other voltages. For instance, a third value may be generated at a third voltage, and a fourth value may be generated at a fourth voltage. These additional values may be combined with the first and the second values to identify data stored by the data location.
Other embodiments may read data by applying multiple stimuli to different kinds of data locations. For instance, the data location 64 may be a photo-diode, a CCD device, a CMOS image sensor, a phase change memory, a magneto-resistive memory, or other type of resistive memory.
The illustrated process 140 may combine the separate values to identify the stored data with greater precision than with an individual value. For example, sensing the floating-gate transistor characterized in
While some of the embodiments described above vary the source-to-drain voltage of a floating-gate transistor, other embodiments may vary other parameters, such as the gate-to-source voltage.
The illustrated quantizing circuit 148 includes a controller 152 that connects to the interfuser 124 via the state signal path 130, the counter 90 via the reset signal path 128, and the gate of the floating-gate transistor 150 via a word line 154. Like several of the other embodiments described herein, both the controller 152 and the other components of the quantizing circuit 148 may be formed on an integrated semiconductor device, for example, or these components may be formed on separate chips, for example in a multi-chip module or on a printed circuit board.
The operation of the quantizing circuit 148 will now be described with reference to both
As mentioned,
Sensing the first value may include resetting the counter 90 by asserting the reset signal 128 and signaling the interfuser 124 that the first value is being sensed by asserting a signal on the state signal path 130. For example, the controller 168 may signal the interfuser 124 to latch a count from the counter 90 at the end of a first sensing time. At the end of the first sensing time, the count of the counter 90 may generally correspond to the first value.
Next in the process 156 (
Before beginning to sense the second value, the controller 152 may reset the counter 90 and signal the interfuser 124 that the second value is being sensed, e.g., by signaling the interfuser 124 to latch the second value. In some embodiments, the counter 90 may output the first value and the second value after both are sensed. The controller 152 may delay between ending the first sensing time and initiating the second sensing time to allow the quantizing circuit 148 to reach steady-state operation, or the controller 152 may begin the second sensing time concurrent to the first sensing time.
In the embodiment illustrated by
Next, in the process of 156 (
In other embodiments, additional values may be sensed at different gate voltages. For example, a third value may be sensed by sensing the floating-gate transistor 150 at a third gate voltage, which may be different from both the first gate voltage and the second gate voltage. Combining the first value, the second value, and the third value may, in some embodiments, include calculating a second-order derivative.
The process 156 may be used both when reading from and when writing to the floating-gate transistor 150. When writing to the floating-gate transistor 150, in some embodiments, the charge on the floating gate may be incrementally adjusted until the charge corresponds to the data being written to the floating-gate transistor 150. Between each adjustment of the charge, the floating-gate transistor 150 may be read with the process 156 to determine whether the floating-gate transistor 150 stores the correct value. If the floating-gate transistor 150 stores the correct value, the writing process may stop. Otherwise, the charge may be adjusted by another increment.
The quantizing circuit 166, in certain embodiments, may execute a reading process 170 illustrated by
Next in the process 170 (
After sensing the second value, a third value may be sensed by sensing the data location at the first gate voltage and a second reference voltage, as illustrated by block 176. The second reference voltage may be different from the first reference voltage used in the preceding to acts illustrated by the blocks 172 and 174, e.g., more than 500 mV larger. This act may include resetting the counter 90 before determining the third value during a third sensing time and identifying the third value to the interfuser 124. The interfuser 124 may store the first value and the second value in memory while waiting for the third value, and in some embodiments, the interfuser 124 may store all three values in memory at generally the same time.
In some embodiments, the third value may be sensed when the data location is at the second gate voltage and the second reference voltage rather than when the data location is that the first gate voltage and the second reference voltage. In other embodiments, a fourth value may be sensed under these conditions. Other embodiments include sensing the data location with each permutation of three different gate voltages and three different reference voltages to gather nine values.
Next in the process 170 (
Data=E1·C1·+E2·C2+E3·C3
Thus the process 170 may read data by sensing a plurality of values under different conditions and combining the values to identify stored data. Sensing the values under differing conditions may tend to increase the resolution of the quantizing circuit 166 because the values may correspond to a profile of the data location rather than just a response of the data location to a single stimulus. Thus, much like knowing a persons height and weight is more useful for identifying a person than having two measurements of their height, the plurality of values sensed by the quantizing circuit may tend to aid in identifying data stored by the data locations.
The system 310 typically includes a power supply 314. For instance, if the system 310 is a portable system, the power supply 314 may advantageously include a fuel cell, permanent batteries, replaceable batteries, and/or rechargeable batteries. The power supply 314 may also include an AC adapter, so the system 310 may be plugged into a wall outlet, for instance. The power supply 314 may also include a DC adapter such that the system 310 may be plugged into a vehicle cigarette lighter, for instance.
Various other devices may be coupled to the processor 312 depending on the functions that the system 310 performs. For instance, a user interface 316 may be coupled to the processor 312. The user interface 316 may include buttons, switches, a keyboard, a light pen, a mouse, a digitizer and stylus, and/or a voice recognition system, for instance. A display 318 may also be coupled to the processor 312. The display 318 may include an LCD, an SED display, a CRT display, a DLP display, a plasma display, an OLED display, LEDs, and/or an audio display, for example. Furthermore, an RF sub-system/baseband processor 320 may also be coupled to the processor 312. The RF sub-system/baseband processor 320 may include an antenna that is coupled to an RF receiver and to an RF transmitter (not shown). One or more communication ports 322 may also be coupled to the processor 312. The communication port 322 may be adapted to be coupled to one or more peripheral devices 324 such as a modem, a printer, a computer, or to a network, such as a local area network, remote area network, intranet, or the Internet, for instance.
The processor 312 generally controls the system 310 by implementing software programs stored in the memory. The memory is operably coupled to the processor 312 to store and facilitate execution of various programs. For instance, the processor 312 may be coupled to the volatile memory 326 which may include Dynamic Ransom Access Memory (DRAM) and/or Static Random Access Memory (SRAM). The volatile memory 326 is typically large so that it can store dynamically loaded applications and data. As described further below, the volatile memory 326 may be configured in accordance with embodiments of the present invention.
The processor 312 may also be coupled to the memory device 12. The memory device 12 may include a read-only memory (ROM), such as an EPROM, and/or flash memory to be used in conjunction with the volatile memory 326. The size of the ROM is typically selected to be just large enough to store any necessary operating system, application programs, and fixed data. Additionally, the non-volatile memory 328 may include a high capacity memory such as a tape or disk drive memory.
The memory device 10 and volatile memory 326 may store various types of software, such as an operating system or office productivity suite including a word processing application, a spreadsheet application, an email application, and/or a database application.
While the invention may be susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments have been shown by way of example in the drawings and have been described in detail herein. However, it should be understood that the invention is not intended to be limited to the particular forms disclosed. Rather, the invention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the following appended claims.
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